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Work In America - Report of a Special Task Force to the U.S. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare (Paperback)
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Work In America - Report of a Special Task Force to the U.S. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare (Paperback)
Series: The MIT Press
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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Work In America discusses the fundamental role of work in the lives
of most adults, pointing out that jobs as they are now create
problems that can and do have serious effects on our society.
Millions of Americans are dissatisfied with the quality of their
working lives with dull-repetitive jobs that stifle autonomy and
initiative. This year-long study prepared for the Department of
Health, Education, and Welfare by the W.E. Upjohn Institute for
Employment Research brings together facts about the current nature
of work and the workplace that have ominous implications for the
social and economic strength of the nation as a whole. The demand
for this report has been tremendous; HEW's initial supply was
exhausted within a few days after publication. The Boston Globe
says that "Work in America... may be one of the most important
documents in recent years." The research Institute of America
reports in its Recommendations that "There is little doubt the
facts in the report are right on target: The blue-collar blues are
haunting the white-collar employee too; there's evidence that even
many managers show signs of the blahs. A trade-off of money for
leisure seems to be the longer-term trend. "Because this study is
officially sponsored by the government, and since it's the latest
attempt to pull together all the facets of the program, Work in
America will have the long-range clout. You'll be hearing about
it-pro and con-on TV & in the press. Congress will debate it,
bureaucrats will scrap over the details." And the New York Times
remarks that "its findings directly challenge President Nixon's
repeated assertions that some Americans are abandoning the 'work
ethic' for the 'welfare ethic.'" In fact, just the oppose is true.
The study provides evidence that satisfying work is a basic human
need in that it establishes individual identity and self-respect
and lends order to human life. Work in America discusses the
fundamental role of work in the lives of most adults, pointing out
that jobs as they are now create problems that can and do have
serious effects on our society. It shows that work-related problems
often result in declining physical and mental health, greater
family and community instability, less "balanced": sociopolitical
attitudes, and in increase in drug abuse, alcohol addiction,
aggression, and delinquency. The report calls for large-scale
reforms to alter this situation, beginning with the basic redesign
of jobs to allow more individual responsibility and autonomy. It
also suggests retraining or "self-renewal" programs for any worker
who wants job mobility or a second career, and it advocates
government commitment to a "total" rather than to a full employment
economy, which leaves approximately 4.5 percent of the citizens
without jobs. "The report has already raised hackles within the
Nixon Administration.... In fact, says one Labor Department
official, the whole program of worker discontent 'would go away if
sociologists and reporters would quit writing about it.' But this,
the study says, is simply not the case-and it concludes with the
particularly apt quotation from Albert Camus: 'Without work all
life goes rotten. But when work is soulless, life stifles and
dies.'"-Newsweek
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